Wheelers Hill, Victoria

Coordinates: 37°53′56″S 145°10′59″E / 37.899°S 145.183°E / -37.899; 145.183
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Wheelers Hill
MelbourneVictoria
Jells Park in Wheelers Hill
Wheelers Hill is located in Melbourne
Wheelers Hill
Wheelers Hill
Location in metropolitan Melbourne
Map
Coordinates37°53′56″S 145°10′59″E / 37.899°S 145.183°E / -37.899; 145.183
Population20,652 (2021 census)[1]
 • Density2,005/km2 (5,193/sq mi)
Postcode(s)3150
Area10.3 km2 (4.0 sq mi)
Location23 km (14 mi) from Melbourne
LGA(s)City of Monash
State electorate(s)
Federal division(s)Hotham
Suburbs around Wheelers Hill:
Mount Waverley Glen Waverley Scoresby
Notting Hill Wheelers Hill Scoresby
Mulgrave Mulgrave Rowville

Wheelers Hill is a suburb in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 23 km south-east of Melbourne's Central Business District, located within the City of Monash local government area. Wheelers Hill recorded a population of 20,652 at the 2021 census.[1]

At 152m above sea level it includes one of the highest points in metropolitan Melbourne.

History[edit]

Wheelers Hill was almost certainly named after James Wheeler, who was an early settler in the Dandenong area. James came out from Kilbride townland, Cavan, Ireland. James married Ellen Reilly née Glynn in 1848 after the death of her husband, Bernard. There was a five-room house on a creek that went down to the Dandenong Creek not far down the road from the Post Office. James had a disagreement with Joseph Jell about the cutting of trees which led to the lands being surveyed. James sold the land in 1854 and moved to Woodend.

The Wheelers Hill Hotel was a post office and stopping point for farmers before a 6 to 8-hour drive to the city by horse to sell their goods. The Wheelers Mansion was destroyed by a fire in the late 1920s. The house was located somewhere to the south of the Wheelers Hill Library. The Post Office opened on 1 January 1869 but was called Mulgrave until 1888.[2]

Wheelers Hill was the last suburb of the now Monash City Council to be linked up to the electricity grid.[citation needed] This is because, at the time, there was a dispute between the Shire of Mulgrave and the Council of Waverley on whose suburb it was. The main roads in Wheelers Hill were named after landowners and run along the boundaries of old orchards and farms.[citation needed]

In Columbia Park on Jells Road, there are steps and a brick outline indicating where "Bellenden" homestead once stood. This was a solid brick home reportedly built for W.D. Robertson, a retired Melbourne baker.[citation needed] It had a tower which gave a commanding view of the Dandenong Ranges. During World War II, the building was in use as a home for children with infantile paralysis, then known as "spastic" babies. When the mothers were needed to work on the farms left idle by the men who had gone to war, their special-needs babies were cared for at Columbia Park. The house was occupied by a family named Jungwirth post-war and was in ruins by the time V.F.L Park was built nearby.[citation needed]

Today[edit]

Wheelers Hill is home to Jells Park, a major recreational facility of over 127 hectares. It contains 9 km of cycle paths and walking tracks which surround a large lake. Wheelers Hill is known for its trees. Parklands make up 31% of the total area of Wheelers Hill.[citation needed]

Sport[edit]

  • Notting Hill/Brandon Park Cricket Club is the suburb's leading cricket team.
  • Tennis players play at the Wheelers Hill Tennis Club on Sunnybrook Drive.[3]
  • Golfers play at the course of the Glen Waverley Golf Club at Waverley Road.[4]

Education[edit]

Secondary Schools

Primary Schools

  • Wheelers Hill Primary School
  • Jells Park Primary School
  • Waverley Meadows Primary School
  • St. Justin's Parish School
  • Brandon Park Primary School
  • Good Shepherd Parish School

Private Schools

Public library and art gallery[edit]

The Museum of Australian Photography [1] and the Wheelers Hill branch of the Monash Public Library Service [2] are co-located in a building at the corner of Jells Road and Ferntree Gully Road, Wheelers Hill. The architect of the original 1990 Gallery was Harry Seidler.[5] Even though Seidler had designed a further whole cultural precinct beyond the gallery,[6] Seidler's designs for a complete cultural centre were never implemented. Later architects Cox Sanderson Ness designed the adjoining library which has a bay of windows facing a small lake. The Gallery contains a nationally significant collection of Australian photography, of which its permanent collection comprises over 1500 works illustrating the development and evolution of the photographic medium in Australia.

Transport[edit]

There are nine bus services that run in or through the vicinity of Wheelers Hill. Two SmartBus services run through the boundaries of the suburb.

Notable people[edit]

See also[edit]

  • City of Waverley – Wheelers Hill was previously within this former local government area.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Australian Bureau of Statistics (28 June 2022). "Wheelers Hill (Suburbs and Localities)". 2021 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 15 July 2022. Edit this at Wikidata
  2. ^ Phoenix Auctions History, Post Office List, retrieved 1 April 2021
  3. ^ "Wheelers Hill Tennis Club | Come play Tennis". wheelershilltennisclub.com. Retrieved 29 October 2022.
  4. ^ Golf Select, Glen Waverley, retrieved 11 May 2009
  5. ^ Whole cultural precinct designed by Harry Seidler likely in late 1987, as the commissioned Max Dupain photos of the model of the whole scheme date to February 1988. The Gallery was completed in 1990.
  6. ^ See "Waverley Cultural Centre" (scheme of 1988) page 356 of Harry Seidler: Four Decades of Architecture by Kenneth Frampton and Philip Drew (London and New York: Thames & Hudson, 1992). This scheme was highly praised by modern architecture writer Kenneth Frampton in book's essay "1965-1991 Isostatic Architecture" being pages 86-111 at page 110